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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Matt Watts and Tom Pilgrim

Prince Harry faces £1 million legal bill after losing High Court security case

Prince Harry is facing an estimated £1 million legal bill after losing his High Court case over the decision to downgrade his UK security after he stepped down as a working member of the Royal Family.

Unless the Duke of Sussex, 39, is successful in an appeal against the court’s ruling, he is expected to have to pay his own lawyers as well as the legal costs of the Home Office.

The Government department has revealed its legal costs had already reached £407,000 by October last year. That was before a three-day trial in December.

The duke hired Schillings International to represent him along with four barristers, meaning his own legal bills are likely to be higher, the Times reported.

Harry’s potential bill comes as he also faces a possible legal bill for £750,000 after dropping his High Court libel claim against the publisher of the Mail on Sunday in January.

Following the decision by the court on Wednesday over his security, the Duke said he will to seek to appeal.

Harry took legal action against the Home Office over the February 2020 decision of the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) that he should receive a different degree of taxpayer-funded protection when in the country.

Ravec’s decision came as a result of a change in the duke’s “status” after he stopped being a “full-time working member of the royal family”, a judge was told.

In the judgment on Wednesday, retired High Court judge Sir Peter Lane rejected the duke’s case and concluded Ravec’s approach was not irrational nor procedurally unfair.

A legal spokesman for Harry said after the ruling that he will appeal, adding: “The duke is not asking for preferential treatment, but for a fair and lawful application of Ravec’s own rules, ensuring that he receives the same consideration as others in accordance with Ravec’s own written policy.

“In February 2020, Ravec failed to apply its written policy to the Duke of Sussex and excluded him from a particular risk analysis.

“The duke’s case is that the so-called ‘bespoke process’ that applies to him is no substitute for that risk analysis.

“The Duke of Sussex hopes he will obtain justice from the Court of Appeal, and makes no further comment while the case is ongoing.”

At a hearing in London in December, the US-based duke’s lawyers said he was “singled out” and treated “less favourably” in the decision by Ravec - a body that falls under the remit of the Home Office.

They said a failure to carry out the risk analysis and fully consider the impact of a “successful attack” on him meant the approach to his protection was “unlawful and unfair”.

The Government said Harry’s claim should be dismissed, arguing Ravec was entitled to conclude the duke’s protection should be “bespoke” and considered on a “case-by-case” basis.

In his 52-page partially redacted ruling, Sir Peter said Harry’s lawyers had taken “an inappropriate, formalist interpretation of the Ravec process”.

He added: “The ‘bespoke’ process devised for the claimant in the decision of 28 February 2020 was, and is, legally sound.”

The judge said he accepted comments from Sir Richard Mottram, the former chairman of Ravec, who said that, even if he had received a document setting out all of Harry’s legal arguments in February 2020, “I would have reached the same decision for materially the same reasons”.

He also ruled the risks analysis Harry complained was not applied to his case was “not a right or even a benefit” but “an analytical tool”, with Ravec concluding a “better tool” was available in the approach it described in February 2020.

Ravec has delegated responsibility from the Home Office over the provision of protective security arrangements for members of the royal family and others, with involvement from the Metropolitan Police, the Cabinet Office and the royal household.

Harry, who was not present at the December hearing, lives in the United States with wife Meghan and their two children after the couple announced they were stepping back as senior royals in January 2020.

He returned briefly to the UK on February 6 without his family after making a transatlantic dash to be with his father following the shock news of the King’s cancer diagnosis.

On Wednesday, Harry appeared for a brief on-camera recorded message in which he called for WellChild Awards nominations.

The duke’s lawyers told the judge in December Harry believes his children cannot “feel at home” in the UK if it is “not possible to keep them safe” there.

The majority of the proceedings were held in private, without the public or press present, because of confidential evidence over security measures for Harry and other public figures.

Sir Peter said his ruling contained redactions because if such information was made public it would have “a serious adverse impact on the individuals concerned, as well as being contrary to the public interest, including that of national security”.

Home Office lawyers had argued the duke was no longer a member of the group of people whose “security position” was under regular review by Ravec, but he was “brought back within the cohort in the appropriate circumstances”.

The court was told it was “simply incorrect” to suggest there was no evidence the issue of impact was considered, adding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales - Harry’s mother - was raised as part of the decision.

Following the ruling, a Home Office spokesperson said: “We are pleased that the court has found in favour of the Government’s position in this case and we are carefully considering our next steps. It would be inappropriate to comment further.

“The UK Government’s protective security system is rigorous and proportionate.

“It is our long-standing policy not to provide detailed information on those arrangements, as doing so could compromise their integrity and affect individuals’ security.”

In May last year, the duke lost a bid to bring a second legal challenge against the Home Office over a decision he should not be allowed to pay privately for his protective security.

Sir Peter said even if the Ravec chairman had been informed about Harry’s offer to pay “it would have been refused on the basis that a person is either entitled to the relevant protection as a member of the Ravec cohort or they are not”.

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